Been wondering the same thing for a while now... Some people say it is the land of jinns, but I doubt it... Although I wish I could go see it, and come back that is...
i was told it is literally a triangle, even if you are on the moon and face towards the triangle, it will suck you in, some people call it a worm hole. I do know that Jinns are involved here.. but need clarification from authentic people..
A triangular area of the Atlantic Ocean bounded by Bermuda, Puerto Rico, and a point near Melbourne, Florida, in which numerous watercraft and aircraft are said to have mysteriously disappeared.
ok thanks... i was just making sure... and ur 1st paragraph made it clear to me.
it was said that there is some crack on the ocean floor that allows some kind of gas to escape... and if they mix with heat, explosion is created... thats why the aircracts crashes when they pass over :confused:
never heard of anything to do with jinn... but it was said to be some kind of weird phenomenon... like takes them to another dimension
but i think the gas explanation makes it more sense... forgot the name of it
Interesting topic...I've seen several documentaries/shows on it (since my dad is SO into all this soldier type stuff..aircrafts.etc), and it's pretty wierd..planes just disappear and they're never heard of again?! I didnt know about this Jinn theory....but the gases one make sort of sense, but where's all the proof..so no one really knows for sure I guess
Beh, I don't think there's anything supernatural about it, just weird science - gases and vortexes and what have you. I haven't heard of this Jinn connection though. Like, ever.
'Earthly flatulance' is the most suave way of telling a fart-joke I have ever heard.
Glad you like it. Here is some evidence:
An explanation for some of the disappearances focuses on the presence of vast fields of methane hydrates on the continental shelves. A paper was published by the United States Geological Survey about the appearance of hydrates in the Blake Ridge area, offshore southeastern United States, in 1981 [1]. Periodic methane eruptions are capable of producing ship-sized bubbles, or regions of water with so much dissolved gas, that the water density is no longer capable of providing adequate buoyancy for ships to float. [2]. If this were the case, such an area forming around a ship could cause it to sink almost directly and without warning. Experiments have proven that a methane bubble can indeed sink a ship by decreasing the density of the water.
Methane gas can also crash planes. The less dense air causes planes to lose lift. Also, the altimeter of planes (the instrument that measures the altitude) functions on the density of air. Because methane is less dense, the altimeter assumes the plane is climbing. Planes at night or in the clouds, where they can't see the ground, assume that they are climbing and dive, causing them to crash. Also, methane in the engine throws off the mix of fuel and air. Since combustion engines use controlled explosions, when the oxygen is displaced with even a very small amount of methane, there's no explosion, and the engine quits. All of these effects of methane gas have been experimentally proven.
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